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That's bankruptcy for ya!
The senior credits had their claims reduced more than half.
You are wrong, however, to say that the 8% stake isn't worth anything because Chrysler is in bankruptcy. The 8% stake is a post bankruptcy stake, which means the company has significantly less debt (which obviously increases the value of the company). The government has taken a pretty big write off on its claim though. Assuming the 8% is an equal trade for its 7B claim (which it isn't), that would mean the company has a valuation of around 87.5B. The UAW, on the other hand, received in exchange for their 10B unfunded pension claim a 55% post-bankruptcy state, which puts their valuation at 18.2B. If the UAW's valuation is more accurate (which is likely), the 8% government stake is only worth 1.45B, a 5.55B loss for the government. Canada took a similar loss on their CAD 2.2B loan to the company. Fiat is the real winner in this deal. They are receiving a 20% upfront stake for promises to update manufacturing plants and licensing power train use to the company. Using the UAW valuation of 18.2B, Fiat's services and licensing would be worth 3.63B, which seems a little on the high side considering an entire car company, i.e., volvo, was being valued by market players at around $3B.
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